Standing Rock and Beyond

About the Project

On one side was a phalanx of officers hundreds strong, with rifles, Humvees and helicopters. On the other, a few dozen people, hunkered down inside a makeshift teepee.

This was the final stand at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, where oil pipeline protesters once numbered in the tens of thousands before winter snow and what proved a temporary reprieve sent most of them home.

But even as the camp population had dwindled, the battle over resources and the land – and who controls both – continued all across North America. That was the story we set out to tell.

In a multiplatform project by Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting that rolled out over several months, we traveled from the tar sands of Canada to the shores of the Gulf, checking in with the communities most affected by the rush to pull oil and natural gas from the ground.

We talked, but we also listened.

In Canada, our reporter joined forces with Discourse Media, a small independent newsroom steeped in indigenous rights, to host a series of small discussions in the path of the planned Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

After President Donald Trump said he had not heard from anyone who opposed the Dakota Access pipeline, we learned that the White House comment line was shut down.

– And a journalism professor who had covered the original protests wrote a piece for us that put the ultimate lie to claims about “energy independence,” showing that the ultimate market for oil from Standing Rock and beyond likely is overseas.

We appreciate your consideration of our effort to illuminate the many ways in which Standing Rock was only the beginning.